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What Is Zi Wei Dou Shu? Purple Star Astrology Explained

Zi Wei Dou Shu (紫微斗数), or Purple Star Astrology, is a classical Chinese astrology system that maps symbolic stars across 12 life palaces using your birth date and time. It reveals personality, relationships, career, wealth, and life themes through the positions and interactions of 14 main stars — headed by the Emperor Star, Zi Wei.

What is Zi Wei Dou Shu (Purple Star Astrology)?

Zi Wei Dou Shu (紫微斗數) is one of the two most widely practised classical Chinese astrology systems — the other being BaZi (Four Pillars). Developed during the Song dynasty and attributed to the scholar Chen Xiyi, the system constructs a circular life chart (命盘) divided into 12 palaces. Symbolic stars — representing archetypal energies rather than literal celestial bodies — are placed into these palaces according to a precise calendrical formula derived from your birth date and time.

The name comes from its most important star: Zi Wei (紫微星), the Purple Star, associated with the Emperor and with Polaris — the North Star that all others revolve around. In a Zi Wei chart, the Emperor Star's palace placement signals where the person's greatest natural authority and life focus lies.

Unlike BaZi, which emphasises Five Element balance and timing cycles, Zi Wei Dou Shu is more domain-specific — it tells you about each area of life separately, through the lens of which stars occupy each of the 12 palaces and how those stars interact. This makes it particularly rich for understanding relationships, career, and wealth patterns in granular detail.

The 12 Palaces (十二宫) — Life Areas

The 12 palaces function similarly to the 12 houses in Western astrology — each governs a distinct life domain. Stars placed in a palace colour and characterise that area of your life. The Life/Self palace (命宮) is the anchor; its position is determined by your birth hour.

PalaceLife Domain
Life / Self (命宮)Core personality, life path, overall destiny blueprint.
Siblings (兄弟宮)Relationships with siblings; also peer networks and colleagues.
Spouse / Marriage (夫妻宮)Romantic partnerships, marriage energy, significant others.
Children (子女宮)Relationships with children; also creativity and subordinates.
Wealth (財帛宮)Financial luck, earning style, attitude toward money.
Health (疾厄宮)Physical health tendencies, illness patterns, body constitution.
Travel (遷移宮)Life abroad, relocation, how you fare away from home.
Friends (交友宮)Friendships, social circles, people who help or hinder you.
Career (官祿宮)Professional life, career path, reputation, achievements.
Property (田宅宮)Real estate, home environment, family ancestral roots.
Fortune / Wellbeing (福德宮)Inner happiness, spiritual life, mental well-being, enjoyment.
Parents (父母宮)Relationship with parents; also superiors, mentors, and elders.

Each palace also has an opposite palace with which it forms a "mirroring" relationship — so, for example, your Self palace and Travel palace are always opposite, suggesting that how you present yourself internally relates to how you fare in the wider world.

The 14 Main Stars (主星)

Zi Wei Dou Shu uses 14 primary stars (主星), each carrying an archetypal quality. These are not literal planets — they are symbolic energies placed by formula. Where a star falls in your chart, and which other stars it neighbours, determines its expression. Stars in the Self palace shape your personality most directly; stars in the Career or Wealth palace shape those domains.

stars
Zi Wei 紫微— Emperor Star
Authority, status, inner strength. The chart's anchor — its palace placement shapes leadership potential and life focus.
stars
Tian Ji 天機— Resourceful Star
Intelligence, strategy, adaptability. Strong in planning and problem-solving.
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Tai Yang 太陽— Sun Star
Vitality, social influence, public life. Associated with career, men in the chart, and outward expression.
stars
Wu Qu 武曲— Wealth/Military Star
Financial ability, decisiveness, executive power. Practical and results-oriented.
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Tian Tong 天同— Blessing Star
Contentment, leisure, emotional well-being. Associated with enjoyment and a slower, gentler pace.
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Lian Zhen 廉貞— Prisoner Star
Passion, ambition, moral boundaries. Can bring great achievement or difficult circumstances depending on position.
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Tian Fu 天府— Treasury Star
Stability, accumulation, preservation. Supportive of wealth and long-term security.
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Tai Yin 太陰— Moon Star
Intuition, nurturing, hidden matters. Associated with women in the chart, home life, and emotional depth.
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Tan Lang 貪狼— Greedy Wolf Star
Desires, talents, magnetic charisma. Linked to creativity, romance, and material pursuits.
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Ju Men 巨門— Giant Gate Star
Communication, controversy, investigation. Sharp-minded but prone to misunderstandings.
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Tian Xiang 天相— Minister Star
Support, diplomacy, assistance. Works well alongside others; facilitates cooperation.
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Tian Liang 天梁— Heavenly Beam Star
Protection, wisdom, longevity. Associated with healing, guidance, and overcoming adversity.
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Qi Sha 七殺— Seven Killings Star
Drive, independence, risk-taking. Powerful and pioneering; requires careful positioning.
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Po Jun 破軍— Army Breaker Star
Change, reform, pioneering energy. Breaks old structures to create new ones — transformative but disruptive.

Beyond the 14 main stars, a Zi Wei chart also incorporates dozens of minor stars, transformation stars (四化 — Hua Lu, Hua Quan, Hua Ke, Hua Ji), and the annual and decade luck cycles. A complete reading considers all of these layers.

How is Zi Wei Dou Shu different from BaZi?

BaZi (Four Pillars of Destiny) and Zi Wei Dou Shu are both derived from the Chinese lunisolar calendar and require a birth date and time — but they use that data very differently. BaZi reads the elemental balance encoded in four pillars of Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches, emphasising the Five Element energies you carry and how they interact over time. Zi Wei Dou Shu places symbolic stars into 12 domain palaces, emphasising life areas and relational patterns.

In practice: BaZi tends to excel at understanding overall life energy, timing (ten-year and annual luck pillars), and elemental strengths and weaknesses. Zi Wei Dou Shu tends to excel at granular domain analysis — for example, understanding your specific career star, your marriage palace, or your wealth patterns in much more explicit terms.

Many classical practitioners study both systems, using them as complementary lenses on the same birth data.

Learn about BaZi (Four Pillars of Destiny) →

Zi Wei Dou Shu vs Western Astrology

Zi Wei Dou Shu and Western astrology share a structural similarity — both use a 12-division chart (palaces vs houses) and both emphasise the interplay of symbolic points within those divisions. But their foundations differ fundamentally. Western astrology is an astronomical system: it tracks the real positions of the Sun, Moon, and planets across the zodiac at your birth. Zi Wei Dou Shu is a calendrical system: its "stars" are not actual celestial bodies — they are symbolic energies assigned by mathematical formula from the calendar.

Both systems are best understood as self-reflective frameworks rather than deterministic predictions. Western astrology's planetary archetypes resonate with Jungian psychological language; Zi Wei Dou Shu's star archetypes draw on classical Chinese cosmology and moral philosophy. They describe different facets of the human experience, and practitioners who use both often find they illuminate each other.

Full comparison: Western Astrology vs Chinese BaZi →

How do I get my Zi Wei Dou Shu chart?

Zi Wei Dou Shu calculation requires converting your birth date to the traditional Chinese lunisolar calendar, then applying the formulas that determine palace positions and star placements. This is a complex process best handled by a specialist — or by an AI-powered reading that has the algorithm built in.

Silk & Spark's expert astrologers include specialists in Zi Wei Dou Shu who can provide interpreted chart readings — explaining not just the star placements but what they mean for your specific life questions. Our Fusion Reading also integrates Eastern and Western chart analysis into a single interpreted session.

Explore Silk & Spark's East-West spiritual wellness tools:

Related Chinese Metaphysics Terms

Zi Wei Dou Shu shares vocabulary with BaZi and Chinese cosmology broadly. These terms appear across both systems:

Four Pillars(四柱)
Year·Month·Day·Hour pillars, representing energy patterns of ancestors·parents·self·children.
Five Elements(五行)
Metal·Wood·Water·Fire·Earth — five fundamental energies describing how everything in the universe operates.
Heavenly Stems(天干)
Ten celestial signs representing different Yin-Yang and Five Element energies.
Earthly Branches(地支)
Twelve terrestrial signs corresponding to the Chinese zodiac animals and time periods.

Frequently Asked Questions About Zi Wei Dou Shu